My above-mentioned warehouse in Memphis used AWG12, which you'll commonly find in many homes here in the USA. It was also built in the 1930s.
Handles 12V just fine up to 400A.
Also, you can use PWM to bypass some of the resistive and capacitive losses, giving the power signal an AC-like effect, which is what we do in our LED lighting for horticulture, down long (4-10 meters) of NFT channel.
Genetic change by a non-sentient living organism is still evolution, nimrod. Did the genetic change give us any useful advantages?
Thank you, ancestral survivors of the Black Plague, for bestowing genetic immunity against 95% of known HIV upon me, through knocking out my CCR5 receptor.
Wires are wires are wires if you're pushing enough power through them. 12V @ roughly 200A is not going to lose too much over a few dozen feet. You just drop the circuit breaker onto a DC storage supply, and hook charging panels + charge controller to the power supply.
I did it with warehouses in Memphis (822 Rozelle) houses are much simpler of a matter.
You need to stop moderating if you can't read and think critically. There is nothing wrong with what I've stated. This is entirely a classical issue we're discussing, sonny.
No, they fluoresce in near-UV (unless you're watching with an IR scope when using 680-700nm light.) Light conversion always works DOWN from higher energy potential to lower energy potential when there's no amplifier or booster present. We can take one blue photon and emit 7 or 8 red photons, roughly. This is why plants have this odd purple/red glow with certain near-uv wavelengths. They absorb blue, emit yellow/red photons as a result.
Newton's third law of motion, which anyone should have learned in MIDDLE SCHOOL, is enough to understand this. For any action, there is an equal, and opposite reaction. Light absorbed, light emitted. Dead fucking simple.
Go read the article, maybe? The entire LED world is abuzz right now with that news. The only issue is that it requires a HOT ENVIRONMENT, where the LED seems to utilize by converting some of that energy into visible-wavelength emissions, beating the power input/optical power output ratio of 1:1.
"a new executive order that will allow the U.S. to specifically target sanctions against individuals, companies or countries who use technology to enable human rights abuse"
Good, start directly with yourselves, US Gov't. You're one of the worst offenders on this fucking planet.
"The present variant of the Agni-V will likely lead to spin-off Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBM) for India’s Ballistic Missile Submarines (SBBN)."
Your two decades versus my 25 years, starting with a TI 99/4A (on which I learned TI BASIC and programmed a couple of things around age 6 (animated 'characters' and more) and from there building my first 8088 at age seven.
I've never had a problem from DOS 5 - Windows 7. Proper planning is 100% key. If you don't truly know the ins and outs of what you're going to be working with, things will screw up. I never had any driver issues in 95/98, because I read about hardware configs that were incompatible (VIA chipset/SoundBlaster, anyone?) and I always stayed roughly one year behind the technological curve, where things tended to be much more stable.
"but got tired of the constant expense & fight with the hardware, software, and drivers to keep my system upgraded to the point I could play the games I wanted to."
So, in other words, you likely built a system without really planning it out.
Proper planning is key, here. I've never had driver, hardware, or software issues to get a game to run (except for emulation.)
Yes, I drove a used one. Newer ones actually suck worse than the original model.
"So why do all the automotive magazines who did long term testing align with his numbers"
Because they don't know how to drive and have lead feet.
Put me against most automotive magazine writers, they'll lose on the track against me, in most any test. I think my own traffic records and hypermileage exposure is pretty evident.
And those protection methods were bypassed because they caused problems with other system processes totally unrelated to the game, to the point of system instability.
In fact, Nexon's code does some rather unethical, possibly illegal things.
"It takes up to 4 years assuming constant peak utilisation according to the source you point to. Constant peak utilisation is obviously an extremely unrealistic assumption."
Maybe for silicon PV. Hi, this is past 2010, we've got low-power PV PRINTING. ROI even under worst conditions in the UK is 2 years. It's what is in use on our solar-assisted crop production sheds. ROI already achieved.
My above-mentioned warehouse in Memphis used AWG12, which you'll commonly find in many homes here in the USA. It was also built in the 1930s.
Handles 12V just fine up to 400A.
Also, you can use PWM to bypass some of the resistive and capacitive losses, giving the power signal an AC-like effect, which is what we do in our LED lighting for horticulture, down long (4-10 meters) of NFT channel.
"with whole chapters devoted to teaching the number line"
Never had that in my classes. No problems understanding a number line, here.
Genetic change by a non-sentient living organism is still evolution, nimrod. Did the genetic change give us any useful advantages?
Thank you, ancestral survivors of the Black Plague, for bestowing genetic immunity against 95% of known HIV upon me, through knocking out my CCR5 receptor.
Wires are wires are wires if you're pushing enough power through them. 12V @ roughly 200A is not going to lose too much over a few dozen feet. You just drop the circuit breaker onto a DC storage supply, and hook charging panels + charge controller to the power supply.
I did it with warehouses in Memphis (822 Rozelle) houses are much simpler of a matter.
You need to stop moderating if you can't read and think critically. There is nothing wrong with what I've stated. This is entirely a classical issue we're discussing, sonny.
No you don't.
I've got plenty of 12V native devices. Stereos, monitors, rack servers, guitar amps, and much, much more.
I would only need a battery bank and perhaps some power-smoothing circuitry.
And FYI, these devices have existed for almost longer than my three decades of life.
No, they fluoresce in near-UV (unless you're watching with an IR scope when using 680-700nm light.) Light conversion always works DOWN from higher energy potential to lower energy potential when there's no amplifier or booster present. We can take one blue photon and emit 7 or 8 red photons, roughly. This is why plants have this odd purple/red glow with certain near-uv wavelengths. They absorb blue, emit yellow/red photons as a result.
You don't need college courses.
Newton's third law of motion, which anyone should have learned in MIDDLE SCHOOL, is enough to understand this. For any action, there is an equal, and opposite reaction. Light absorbed, light emitted. Dead fucking simple.
Go read the article, maybe? The entire LED world is abuzz right now with that news. The only issue is that it requires a HOT ENVIRONMENT, where the LED seems to utilize by converting some of that energy into visible-wavelength emissions, beating the power input/optical power output ratio of 1:1.
"Here in the states, child services can take your kid away from you if you so much as look at it wrong in public."
Not back in the 80s, in Texas.
I'll give you two guesses as to how I know. Hint: I'm 30 now.
"Isn't that the old "allow no failure" school of thought repackaged?"
Yes, but instead of it being like NCLB, we actually DO SOMETHING about it.
"a new executive order that will allow the U.S. to specifically target sanctions against individuals, companies or countries who use technology to enable human rights abuse"
Good, start directly with yourselves, US Gov't. You're one of the worst offenders on this fucking planet.
"The present variant of the Agni-V will likely lead to spin-off Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBM) for India’s Ballistic Missile Submarines (SBBN)."
TFS changed TFA link.
Your two decades versus my 25 years, starting with a TI 99/4A (on which I learned TI BASIC and programmed a couple of things around age 6 (animated 'characters' and more) and from there building my first 8088 at age seven.
I've never had a problem from DOS 5 - Windows 7. Proper planning is 100% key. If you don't truly know the ins and outs of what you're going to be working with, things will screw up. I never had any driver issues in 95/98, because I read about hardware configs that were incompatible (VIA chipset/SoundBlaster, anyone?) and I always stayed roughly one year behind the technological curve, where things tended to be much more stable.
"Strings of Christmas lights"
Of which most made today are LED.
Either LED systems, or they used Pentron 3-color adjustable lighting.
"but got tired of the constant expense & fight with the hardware, software, and drivers to keep my system upgraded to the point I could play the games I wanted to."
So, in other words, you likely built a system without really planning it out.
Proper planning is key, here. I've never had driver, hardware, or software issues to get a game to run (except for emulation.)
You need to RTFA some more. What I stated is explicitly stated in TFA.
Catch up on weapons tech with me, now. I'm already playing with 10kW lasers. Where are you, sonny?
Maple Story has built-in anti-botting and cheat detection software built-in. That keyboard hook? Nexon's fault, not mine.
Yes, I drove a used one. Newer ones actually suck worse than the original model.
"So why do all the automotive magazines who did long term testing align with his numbers"
Because they don't know how to drive and have lead feet.
Put me against most automotive magazine writers, they'll lose on the track against me, in most any test. I think my own traffic records and hypermileage exposure is pretty evident.
I'm the boss. I can do as I please, I paid for that equipment.
And those protection methods were bypassed because they caused problems with other system processes totally unrelated to the game, to the point of system instability.
In fact, Nexon's code does some rather unethical, possibly illegal things.
>mfw I worked on part of this code
"This building is in Mountain View California. The climate does not require much from a building to maintain the interior temps"
You must not live in CA. Up in San Fran, middle of July, that bay can freeze over.
Mountain View is not very far from San Fran, and shares the same bay.
Try again when you're a resident of the area and know the weather.
In that picture.
"It takes up to 4 years assuming constant peak utilisation according to the source you point to. Constant peak utilisation is obviously an extremely unrealistic assumption."
Maybe for silicon PV. Hi, this is past 2010, we've got low-power PV PRINTING. ROI even under worst conditions in the UK is 2 years. It's what is in use on our solar-assisted crop production sheds. ROI already achieved.